Franklin was not the first to build an electrostatic generator. European scientists developed machines to generate static electricity decades earlier. In 1663,
Otto von Guericke generated static electricity with a device that used a sphere of sulfur.
Francis Hauksbee developed a more advanced electrostatic generator around 1704 using a glass bulb that had a vacuum. He later replaced the globe with a glass tube of about emptied of air. The glass tube was a less effective static generator than the globe, but it became more popular because it was easier to use. Machines that generated static electricity with a glass disc were popular and widespread in Europe by 1740. In 1745, German cleric
Ewald Georg von Kleist and Dutch scientist
Pieter van Musschenbroek discovered independently that the electric charge from these machines could be stored in a
Leyden jar, named after the city of
Leiden in the
Netherlands. In 1745,
Peter Collinson, a businessman from London who corresponded with American and European scientists, donated a German "glass tube" along with instructions how to make static electricity, to Franklin's
Library Company of Philadelphia. Collinson was the library's London agent and provided the latest technology news from Europe. Franklin wrote a letter to Collinson on March 28, 1747, thanking him, and saying the tube and instructions had motivated several colleagues and him to begin serious experiments with electricity. In 1746, Franklin began working on electrical experiments with
Ebenezer Kinnersley after he bought all of
Archibald Spencer's electrical equipment that he used in his lectures. Later, he was also associated with
Thomas Hopkinson and
Philip Syng in experimentation with electricity. In the summer of 1747 they had received an electrical system from
Thomas Penn. While no records exists to tell exactly what parts were included in the system, historian J. A. Leo LeMay believes it was a combination of an electricity generating machine, a Leyden jar, a glass tube, and a stool that was electrically insulated from the ground. This gave Franklin a complete system to experiment with generating and storing electricity. When
amber,
sulfur, or
glass are rubbed with certain materials, they produce electrical effects. Franklin theorized this "electrical fire" was collected from this other material somehow, and not produced by the friction on the object. He decided to retire early from his printing business, still in his early forties, to spend more time studying electricity. In 1748, Franklin turned over his entire printing business to his partner
David Hall. He moved into a new Philadelphia home with his wife, where he built a laboratory to conduct experiments and research new electrical theories. Franklin experimented not only with the electrostatic machine with the glass globe, but also with the Leyden jar. He kept a detailed journal of his research in a diary called "Electrical Minutes" that has since been lost. Franklin's machine was given to
Library Company of Philadelphia by Franklin's grandson in 1792, and is currently on display at the
Franklin Institute. == Description ==